Man or Rabbit
The fundamental question with which C.S. Lewis wrestles in "Man or Rabbit?" is...
Can't you lead a good life without believing in Christianity?
According to "Man or Rabbit?," C.S. Lewis maintains that a "Man" could potentially be in any of the following "states," except...
Dishonest Error
According to "Man or Rabbit?," C.S. Lewis maintains that a "Rabbit" is one in the "state" of...
Dishonest Error
In "Man or Rabbit?," C.S. Lewis explicitly discusses all of the following "states," except...
Dishonest Ignorance
According to "Man or Rabbit?," if the "Christian Proposal" IS NOT true, but someone, after diligently weighing all the possible evidence available to them, DID believe it, they would be in a state of...
Honest Error
According to "Man or Rabbit?," if the "Christian Proposal" IS true, but someone, after diligently weighing all the possible evidence available to them, DID NOT believe it, they would be in a state of...
Honest Error
According to "Man or Rabbit?," if the "Christian Proposal" IS true, but someone, because they had never been exposed to it, DID NOT believe it, they would be in a state of...
Honest Ignorance
With which of the following statements would C.S. Lewis, the author of "Man or Rabbit?," DISAGREE?
That the perspectives of the Materialist and the Christian are so radically different they share no common ground.
As discussed in class, which of the following statements IS NOT true?
That, to use C.S. Lewis' terminology, the mantra/motto of the "Man" is "Ignorance is Bliss."
The phrase which best summarizes C.S. Lewis' understanding of the human person, as presented in "Man or Rabbit?," is...
Truth-Seeker
As quoted in the reading, and in response to the Rabbit's question, "What is REAL?," the Skin Horse essentially answers that...
becoming real is a process requiring others.
C.S. Lewis' main point, as portrayed in "Man or Rabbit?," can best be summarized as...
the belief that a Christian or a Materialist can be either a "Man" or a "Rabbit," the distinguishing feature being that a "Man" is concerned with what's true, whereas a "Rabbit" is concerned with what's pleasant.
According to C.S. Lewis' Anthropology, as presented in "Man or Rabbit?," one of a human being's most defining characteristics is that...
they are concerned that their Subjective Appraisal(s) be in keeping with the Objective Reality.